Saturday, November 8, 2014

The Future of Orthodoxy

Metropolitan Jonah of Uganda

The future of Orthodoxy is not to be found in the halls of
St. Vladimir’s or Holy Cross seminaries, strategic as they may both be for the North
American scene. Nor is the future of the
Orthodox Church to be found in the hoped for Great and Holy Council, where the
nettle of American jurisdictions may finally be grasped. Orthodoxy’s future is not found in the Moscow
Patriarchate, regardless of its power and influence at home and beyond. Nor is it to be found in the Phanar of old
Constantinople where His All Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholemew
presides.

Instead, the future of Orthodoxy may be found in a Nairobi
slum. Thirty-three years ago, a small seminary was established with the brief to train leadership for the small but growing Kenyan Orthodox Church. Almost
immediately, surrounding bishops started sending their best men to Nairobi to
be trained there, at the clunkily-named ‘Orthodox Patriarchal Ecclesiastical School
of [Archbishop of Cyprus] Makarios III’ in Riruta Satellite, a corner of the
vast Kawangware slum in western Nairobi.
The school, under the direction of Dr. Andreas Tillyrides, who would in
time become His Eminence Makarios, Archbishop of Kenya and Dar es Salaam, succeeded
in training clergy for the archdiocese and, increasingly, leadership for the
new world of Orthodoxy taking root in sub-Saharan Africa.

His Grace Innocentios of Rwanda and Burundi ordaining clergy in Bujumburu

I was baptized and chrismated at this seminary in 2011. At that time there were 90 students, many
from Kenya’s 300 Orthodox parishes. But
there were also students from Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda,
Zambia, Zimbabwe, Madagascar, Camaroon, and probably other sub-Saharan African
countries that I’m not remembering. In
fact, this little school was and remains the only Orthodox seminary in
sub-Saharan Africa. The Alexandrian
Patriarchate in Egypt also maintains a school in Alexandria, but as one might
imagine there are issues in bringing African Christians to Muslim Egypt for
theological training.

Kenyan Deacon leading the Great Litany of the Divine Liturgy at the seminary

Several years ago, the Nairobi school was forced to close
due to a financial crisis caused by the meltdown of the Greek and Cypriot
economies. Cypriot Christians in
particular had been astonishingly generous and had essentially funded the
activities of the Kenyan Archdiocese and its Cypriot hierarch. But that funding all but dried up in
2012/2013. There was no more money to
pay for scholarships, no more money to pay for salaries, no more money to pay
for feeding everybody. So His Eminence
was forced to send everybody home. In
2014 as the crisis eased somewhat, the seminary was reopened and 30 students
were allowed to return. But a further 50
or so were without sufficient support to begin or continue their seminary
education. I was there in February of
this year and saw first-hand the dedication of the administration and faculty
to make it work with what they had, as well as the focus of the students, many
of whom had made tremendous sacrifices to pursue Orthodox theological training.

Seminary Students eating dinner this past February

It would be easy to get caught up in the details and
day-to-day dramas of running a seminary in Kenya and all the logistical
challenges that entails. But if one
steps back for a wider view, it becomes increasingly obvious that something much
bigger is going on, bigger than Nairobi, bigger than Kenya, bigger than
Africa. The Orthodox Church has been
growing impressively in Kenya for fifty years since the devastating ban, placed
on the Orthodox Church by the British colonial authorities in the 1950s for its close
association with the Kikuyu resistance to British rule, was rescinded. The Church had formed during the 1920s as part of the resistance to mission Christianity by Kikuyu Christians wanting to be free of Western Christianity and have a church like that of the early Christians. However the ban forced Kenya's Orthodox Church to start again at a time when the Roman Catholics,
Presbyterians and Anglicans in Kenya were going from strength to strength. [You can read more about this in my article,
‘Offended Christians, Anti-Mission Churches and Colonial Politics: One Man’s Story of the Messy Birth of the
African Orthodox Church in Kenya’ in Journal
of Religion in Africa 43 (2013) 261-296] And although behind in every statistic when
compared to other, more wealthy Kenyan churches, the Orthodox in Kenya have
been growing, and doing so for a number of years and at an impressive rate.

With His Eminence Makarios of Kenya visiting the growing churches of Western Kenya

But the Orthodox Church is not just growing in Kenya. As Orthodox parishes in African capitals make
the transition from being ethnic expat enclaves to centers of outreach for the
surrounding communities, the number of Orthodox Christians is poised to grow
exponentially. And as these nascent
national Churches obtain well-trained leadership, Orthodoxy will be
increasingly rooted in the local ethos and languages, no longer a Greek
transplant, but a Rwandan Church, a Burundian Church, a Turkana Church, a
Malagasy Church. Protestant and Catholic scholars and
missiologist have been observing for some time that the center of gravity of
global Christianity has been moving south.
Christianity in Africa, with all of its raucous, noisy diversity, will
lead global Christianity, first by weight of sheer numbers, and as the Church
continues to mature, by an increasing theological sophistication.

Orthodox Children in remote western Kenya

The Orthodox Church does not have the same depth and breadth
of history in Africa as the Roman Catholics and many of the Protestant
denominations (with the exception of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and the
Egyptian Coptic Church, but that’s another story). But the same wave that these other
expressions of Christianity are experiencing will become the Orthodox
experience as well. The day is coming
when there will be more Orthodox Christians in sub-Saharan Africa than in the
rest of the Orthodox world combined (Russia included). And they will be led by African bishops (as
the African Churches already increasingly are: the current bishops of Uganda, Tanzania and
Rwanda/Burundi are all Ugandans).

His Grace Bishop Innocentios in Rwanda

What this means is that the most important place for the
future of the Orthodox Church is the little seminary in Nairobi. The men who will make up the leadership of
the Orthodox Church of Africa are being trained there. New seminaries will undoubtedly be established. New monasteries endowed. New Churches planted and consecrated. New Christians baptized and chrismated. New
catechists and readers and deacons and priests trained. New Hierarchs ordained. And as the African Church takes its place
among the great and historical Orthodox Churches of Asia, Europe and North
America, her success (or failure) will, to a significant degree, be the success
(or failure) of the global Church. The
future of Orthodoxy is an African future.

His Grace Bishop Innocentios presiding at a baptism and chrismation service for infants and adults in Burundi